HEROES AND VILLAINS 2000
By
Eric S. Margolis  31 December 2000


The dawn of the 21st Century was supposed to have been a time of great and
noble happenings.  But much ballyhooed 2000 turned out to be a year with
few heroes or heroic acts.  On the bright side, at least the world didn't
end.

*Pope John Paul II - Once again, this remarkable pope set a world standard
for humanity, compassion, and personal courage.  In spite of fast-failing
health and crippling infirmities,  this warrior pope has soldiered
painfully onwards, travelling without relent to deliver his message of
morality and decency to a world that badly needs it.

The Polish Pope continues his crusade against moral relativism, reminding
that right and wrong still exist, even in our permissive age.  He
reinvigorated the Catholic Church and repaired the damage done to the faith
by his weak, overly liberal predecessors.  Equally important, Pope John
Paul II, having played a key role in the destruction of modern history's
greatest evil, communism,  keeps reminding the world of the plight of
people who have no voice: the poor, the oppressed, the forgotten.  History,
this column believes, will record Pope John Paul as one of the  greatest
popes. He will likely certainly be canonized.

*Mexico's President Vicente Fox -  This amiable businessman came from
almost nowhere to mount an historic, free-enterprise  revolution that
toppled Mexico's supposedly unbeatable PRI party, an entrenched, deeply
corrupt socialist oligarchy that misruled, looted, and bled the nation for
over 70 years. Whether Fox realizes his goals of reducing endemic
corruption, building effective, clean government, and uplifting Mexico's
poor through the  free market, remains to be seen.  But he clearly means
business and has infused long-cynical, dispirited Mexicans with hope and
pride.  Socialist-lite Canada could use a Fox-style revolution.  Viva El
Presidente!

*South Korea's Kim Dae Jung - Skeptics, this column included, long doubted
that Kim's `Sunshine' policy of luring dangerous North Korea out of its
shell would work.  But this old battler for human rights and democracy was
right, at least so far.  Kim, and his northern counterpart, Kim Jong-il,
have taken a few steps to reducing the extremely dangerous tensions on the
Korean Peninsula that made it the second most likely place, after Kashmir,
for a nuclear war to erupt.  Hopefully, we are seeing the beginning of the
 reunification of the hard-working, patriotic, long-suffering  Korean
people. But caution is still advised.

*Aslan Meshkhadov, President of the Chechen Republic - In a forgotten war,
in a forgotten land, a forgotten people, the Chechen, battle on against
impossible odds.  Some 5,000 courageous Chechen fighters, led by field
commanders Shamil Basayev and Khattab, have fought a 120,000-man Russian
occupation army to a bloody standstill, continuing the Chechen people's
epic 250-year struggle against brutal Russian rule.

Surrounded, short of munitions, food,  and supplies, with almost no medical
support, cut off from the outside world and ignored by all, even their
so-called Muslim `brother nations,' these lions of the Caucasus wage a
jihad, or holy struggle, against Russian oppression, colonialism, and
attempted genocide.  Human rights groups charge Russia with mass murder,
torture, operating concentration camps, rape, pillage, razing entire
cities, and showering millions of mines on tiny Chechnya.  Shamefully, the
world watches Russia's frightful crimes in silence, or even calls the
heroic Chechen `Islamic terrorists.'  Canada just invited Russia's Putin as
an honored guest: nothing was said about war crimes, mines, or torture.
This writer, who has covered 14 wars, has never seen braver or more skilful
fighters.  Freedom for Chechnya in 2001.

*George Papandreou of Greece - Greece's youthful, Canadian educated,
foreign minister leads a new generation of Balkan leaders who put common
 sense before emotion.  Papandreou is trying to lead the feisty Greeks away
from  traditional, knee-jerk  anti-Turkish reactions, forging better
relations with Greece's old foe and most important neighbor. Papandreou has
also helped calm the turbulent Balkan diplomatic scene and taken a lead in
developing adult relations between the often squabbling  nations of East
Europe.  By treating Turks with respect and basic decency, Papandreou has
done more for Greece's security than all previous Greek governments, his
father's included.

*Policemen, Firefighters, Nurses and Paramedics- The three unsung,
neglected heroes of our society.  These frontline troops of civilization
battle every day to protect the public. Many pay a heavy price in broken
personal lives, exhaustion, depression, even death. Their pay should be
tripled; those of politicians and bureaucrats halved. This column gives
them its highest award for courage and dedication.





VILLAINS

*Sierra Leone's Foday Sankoh - Sankoh, Issa Sesay, and the other leaders of
the murderous rabble called the  Revolutionary United Front (RUF),
responsible for atrocities that shock even violence-numbed Africans. So too
 their ally,  Liberian warlord Charles Taylor, who forced his predecessor,
President Samuel K. Doe, to eat his own ears. Sierra Leone's  long civil
war  has become one of the world's primary horror scenes.  Gangs of teenage
RUF `soldiers,' crazed on pot and palm beer, routinely chop off the arms or
legs of civilians, babies included,  to create terror and obedience. This
diamond-rich, but ruined little  nation has sunken back into Africa's heart
of darkness.  Its only hope: recolonization by Britain.

*Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic -  Now in temporary `retirement' after being
removed from power by a national uprising, this communist and indicted war
criminal, who ignited four Balkan Wars and has the blood of nearly 300,000
victims on his head, continues to plot his return, so far untouched by the
arm of justice.   Milosevic, and his fellow war criminals, Ratko Mladic and
Radovan Karadzic, must be brought to trial for committing the worst crimes
against humanity in Europe since Stalin and Hitler.  Serbia says it will
try them at home. Instead, they should be turned over to the UN war crimes
tribunal in the Hague.

*Romania's Corneliu Vadim Tudor - Just what the world does not need, a new
Balkan racist demagogue. At least Tudor, who was recently defeated by an
old  communist in Romania's presidential race,  hasn't the brains or skill
of Serbia's Milosevic.  Tudor was once in-house poet to Romania's late,
lunatic dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu. Now, this dangerous windbag and clown
leads the `Greater Romania Party.' Romania is a total wreck:  it needs
decent government, not more Romania. Tudor blames his nation's poverty on
`dirty Jews,' recalling the fascist Iron Guard of the 1930's. And on
 Hungarians, particularly those in Romanian-ruled Transylvania, that was
historically part of Hungary until handed to Romania after WWI.  Dump him
in the Danube along with Milosevic.

*Israel's Ariel Sharon - The general who presided over the massacres at
Shatilla and Sabra camps in Beirut that left over 1,000 Palestinian
civilians dead, barely escaped being indicted for war crimes. Sharon
recently bulldozed his way into Israel's political spotlight by making a
provocative visit to Jerusalem Al'Aksa mosque, purposely igniting a
explosion of rage among Palestinians, who saw peace negotiations going
nowhere and Jewish settlements expanding.  Sharon staged the ugly incident
to thwart his political rival, Benjamin Netanyahu, from regaining control
of the rightwing Likud Party, and to scupper  any move towards peace.
 Adored by the fanatical Jewish settlers who are blocking the road to
Arab-Israeli peace.  This brutal, far-right extremist may soon become
Israel's next prime minister.

*Osama Bin Laden - Seen as a hero across much of the Muslim World  for his
David v. Goliath struggle against US Oil Raj in the Mideast.  In fact, Bin
Laden has hurt his people's cause by getting involved with bombings, or at
least openly supporting them, and pouring forth fiery, frenzied invective
against the US, convincing most Americans that anyone who opposes American
hegemony in the Mideast is a terrorist.  Bin Laden is merely the latest of
a long line of Muslim big mouths, like Libya's Khadaffi or Iraq's Saddam,
 who play right into the west's need to demonize its  opponents.

Madeleine Albright - The lackluster US Secretary of State  showed twice
this year how unworthy she is of her high office. First, when queried about
UN charges that 500,000 Iraqi children had died because of the decade-long
US-British embargo of Iraq, she replied, `it is a price worth paying.'
 This cruel idiocy will come to haunt her, and the United States.  Now, the
Clinton Administration has joined with Russia to inflict the same
punishment on starving but defiant Afghanistan.

Second, when the `Intifada-II' erupted in Palestine after Sharon's Temple
Mount provocation, she claimed  `Palestinians placed Israel under siege,' a
ludicrous and biased statement from the State Secretary of a nation
supposedly acting as `honest broker' in the Mideast.  In fact,  the
violence was almost totally confined to Palestinian towns and villages
surrounded by Israel tanks and troops.  If Mrs Albright thinks teenage boys
throwing rocks at armored vehicles constitutes a siege of Israel, a leading
world military power, she needs help.  Gen. Colin Powell you're needed ASAP
at State!

*Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe - This fading African chief  is trying to save
his political skin by launching a race war against Zimbabwe's embattled
white farmers, who produce most of the nation's vital crop exports.  Whites
are being murdered and assaulted in a government-led campaign to drive them
from their property. In South Africa, almost one white farmer is being
murdered each day by blacks, while the government does nothing, or even
encourages such crimes.   In both cases, the world watches silently.

*Peru's Vladimiro Montesinos - Former intelligence chief of Peru, this
shadowy, sleazy  figure, who once worked for CIA, was caught on red-handed
on film bribing a legislator. Montesinos was involved in buying arms for
Colombia's vicious marxist rebels, importing contraband, including
thousands of designer t-shirts and jewelry, and suspected of being in
league with drug barons.  Montesino's illegal activities brought down the
government of his former patron, the tough, capable president, Alberto
Fujimori, known to one and all as `el chino'(though he is of Japanese
descent). Full-of-surprises Fujimori now says he will settle in Japan as a
Japanese citizen.  Montesinos is on the lam.

 Copyright   Eric S. Margolis, December 2000

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